The Farmer They Mocked Turned Two Hundred Chickens Into A Prairie Army-nhu9999 - Chainityai

The Farmer They Mocked Turned Two Hundred Chickens Into A Prairie Army-nhu9999

The morning the locusts came, the sky outside Salina turned the color of stove ash.

I was standing at my garden fence with a pail in my hand, watching the first brown shimmer rise over the western road.

At first, I told myself it was dust.

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Then Pete Hollis came riding hard from the north field, bareheaded, his horse lathered white at the neck.

“Locusts,” he shouted.

The word emptied the mercantile, stopped wagons in the road, and brought old men onto porches because they remembered the last time the sky had grown teeth.

I remembered the stories, too.

My father had told them when I was small.

He said people stood in their fields and shouted until their voices broke, and the insects did not care.

He had been gone since winter, his heart giving out before dawn with one hand still curled like he meant to reach for his boots.

He left me forty acres, a milk cow named June, a mortgage note at the Salina bank, and his stubbornness.

Del Pruitt treated that stubbornness like an insult.

Del farmed the big land east of mine, with hired hands, straight fences, new harness, and a way of tipping his hat that felt like a door being shut.

Twice after my father’s funeral, he offered to buy my land for a price that insulted the grave.

When I refused the second time, he smiled at the men near the well and said, “A woman alone can’t hold ground. Sell before the bank teaches you.”

I said nothing.

That was not meekness.

It was arithmetic.

Words cost breath, and I needed mine for work.

The work was everywhere, and every living insect on the prairie seemed to have chosen my cabbage patch for supper.

I fought them by hand at first.

Cutworms into a tin of water.

Beetles crushed between thumb and stone.

Each morning I won a row, and each evening they took it back.

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